In September 1904 the Daughters of the Cross of Liege
purchased North Cheam House for £4,625 in order to establish a
hospital. It was named St Anthony's Hospital and initially had 10
beds. An operating theatre was installed at the cost of
£224.

The first patients to be admitted were a woman and her 3-year-old son, both suffering from tuberculosis (TB).

By 1907 the old house had been extended and the Hospital then had 40
beds in 5 wards. An open air shelter for children with TB was built to
the north of the Hospital and a chapel to the south of it.

All patients paid for treatment according to their
means; contributions varied from a few shillings to 2 guineas
(£2.10) a week, but many received free care.

In 1914 a new 3-storey Hospital was erected adjacent and southwest to the existing building.

The new Hospital opened in 1915 and had 100 beds. It had a
frontage of polished brick, some 163 feet (49 metres) in length.
The building faced the main road and was fronted by a wide garden.

In 1934 the Hospital became a state-recognised Training School for Nurses.

By 1935 the shelter for TB patients had been replaced by St Joseph's Sanatorium.

In 1948 the Hospital had 102 beds. It was disclaimed from the NHS, but received NHS
patients under contract from the local Regional Health Authority.

By 1958 the Hospital had gained an excellent reputation for the care
and cure of
all types of general medical and surgical disorders. About 3,000
patients a year were admitted, and some 6,000 outpatients seen.
Although part of its maintenance costs were met by the Regional
Hospital Board, it remained independent. Mounting costs and
debts, however, threatened to overwhelm the limited resources of the
Community. A new children's ward had been built, as well as a
boiler house, while a new lift to the operating
theatre had been installed, new laboratory equipment and extra ward
facilities purchased, and other improvements insisted upon by the
General Nursing Council. A new
Nurses' Home was planned. An immediate debt of £10,000 had
to be paid in the near future, while a long-term loan of £27,000
was still outstanding. An extension to the Nurses' Training
Centre was badly needed, but would cost £25,000. The funds
had to be raised from voluntary sources.

In 1960 the nuns were equipped with one-way shortwave radio receivers
to make communication easier between them. These sets were a gift
from the League of Friends of St Anthony's Hospital,
which had been established a few years earlier by the first Catholic
Mayor of Cheam, Alderman David Sullivan. Another modern
innovation was the possibility of patients listening to the services in
the chapel from their bedside radios (a microphone had been placed on
the altar. The microphone was also wired to the annexe where sick
nuns were accommodated, enabling them also to hear the service).

By the 1960s the Hospital was one of the largest Catholic hospitals in
the country, with 160 beds and a staff of 100 nurses (excluding the nuns), many in training.

In 1961 Archbishop O'Hara,
Apostolic Delegate, opened the new Nurses' Home. The 2-storey
building had cost £40,000 to build and contained 50 rooms, each
with its own built-in wardrobe. There was a small communal
'laundry' equipped with hot rails, a heated cupboard and ironing boards.

In 1967 the Daughters of the Cross made plans to build a £3.5m
hospital, which would have 300 single rooms for patients. A
monorail system would deliver supplies from a central distribution
area to where they were needed, thus saving 50% of a nurse's time spent
in 'fetching and carrying'.

Two years later the projected cost of the new hospital had risen to £6m.

In the early 1970s the NHS contract ceased and the Nursing School closed, the last such Catholic one in the country.

However, it was decided to continue with rebuilding the hospital
adjacent to the existing one, but on a smaller scale - 80 beds instead
of 300, all for private patients. In 1972 the foundation stone
was laid by Archbishop Cyril Cowderoy of Southwark.

The new building was officially opened on 22nd October 1975 by the Duke of Norfolk. The patients had been transferred from the old hospital and the new building retained its Catholic atmosphere.

The highly innovative hospital was designed to further the principles
of patient-centred care that the Sisters had always advocated. It
was one of the first hospitals to be built with single rooms for
patients instead of wards. The appointment of non-nursing staff
for administrative duties meant that the nurses could concentre wholly
on providing nursing care.

AMI (Hospitals) Ltd
had helped to finance the project and, in 1974,
the nuns had signed a 10-year contract with the company to take over
management of the new building. The company decided that the Hospital should
specialise in cardiac surgery. Consequently, it had an 8-bedded Intensive Care
Unit and offered the only
cardiac surgery programme in the area.

In 1984 the contract expired, but the Hospital retained a former member of the company as its Director of Management Services.

In 1985 the Hospital had 100 beds and 5 beds in its Intensive Care Unit.

In May 1986 work began to build a hospice in the grounds of the Hospital. St Raphael's Hospice was officially opened on 1st
April 1987 by the Duchess of Norfolk.
It was to provide palliative care for the terminally ill
and had 10 beds, which were available free of charge to local patients
and their families.

In 1997 the Hospice was extended.

By 1999, however, while the Hospital was in a more secure financial position, its revenue was falling.

In 2012, because of the advanced age of many of the nuns and the
decline in membership of the order, the Daughters of the Cross decided
to sell the Hospital, but to retain ownership of the Hospice.

However, the staff and consultants at the Hospital, as well as the
Chairman of the Board of the Hospice, were concerned about how the sale
would affect the charity work of the Hospice (which was subsidised by
Hospital revenues). Another consideration was the future ability
of the Hospital to operate within the moral directives of the Catholic
Church.

In June 2013 an appeal was sent to the Vatican to prevent the sale.
In November of the same year, a petition signed by over 7,000
people was presented to Parliament, requesting its help in preventing
the sale. It was hoped that a new Catholic charity would be
formed to take over both the Hospital and the Hospice.

Despite these activities, the Hospital was sold in March 2014 to Spire Healthcare Ltd, a private healthcare group.

In 2015 work began on the erection of a £30m building to house an orthopaedic centre and six new operating theatres.

Present
status (April 2017)

The 92-bed Hospital continues in operation.

Most of the buildings on the large
campus are modern; many of the older buildings have been demolished,
but a few remain. The site now includes the Hospital with its
recently opened block, the Hospice, St Joseph's Convent and its chapel,
St Mary's Convent, St Bede's Conference Centre and various other
buildings.

St Raphael's Hospice remains under the ownership and management of the charity Daughters of the Cross.

On 1st August 2011 the seven remaining
Daughters of the Cross moved into a refurbished building on the site,
which then became St Mary's Convent. Their former convent, St
Joseph's Convent, became the headquarters of the order.